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Oct 2020

My title is pretty literal as well :'D main character needs to rebuild his old coven to do something, but the members of said old coven are all gone, so he'll be pretty much forced to make do with a bunch of disaster witches and wizards he barely even knows... hence The Emergency Coven :joy:

Why don´t you name it using the words discovering and djins in it?
That could make an interesting title.
Think about famous movies, some have names in it but there is
usual a subtitle under it.
LYDIA
discovering the djinns

STAR WARS (would already be enough)
a new hope (tells you that it propbably contains more then just fighting)

INDIANA JONES
raiders of the lost ark / and the temple of doom / and the last crusade

GHOST BUSTERS (self expl)

All the Harry Potter movies/books have the second title.
It also leaves you room to keep the main character as the title and name
different episodes.
When you write a story about a hopeless romantic you call it hopeless romantic
about a hitman you can call it something with bullets in it or hitman, target, killing

It stupid and overly simple. My main female character's name means Sea and my main male characters name means Wolf. Thus, The Sea and the Wolf

See this is really smart thinking and im not like that haha
it seems simple and easy when you lay it out like that and yet my brain just doesnt wanna think like that :sweat_02:

Perhaps I should practice my thinking for my other stories, see if i can make the titles more interesting :triumph:


Mine is entitled "Bread, and all variations of the aforementioned" which is one hell of a mouthful.

It's the name of the main character, and the premise is that she's trying to change it to something more, uh, easy on the eyes.

The character is a doll who is actually a monstrous amalmagation of other dolls, all named after a type of bread. There's some other symbolism behind the title but it sort of spoils some plot points lol

Mine is like as it is. "The Seventh Kingdom". It's about the mystery on what happened to the Seventh Kingdom or what The Seventh Kingdom really means to my main character. The mystery is for him to solve. :smiley:

The title of my comic Cup & Quill has a few different layers going on.

  • At the most basic it’s the name of the cafe & bookstore that the main characters are connected by.

  • If you want to go a little deeper Ember and Goji, who are holding hands on the cover work in the two separate halves of the store. Goji works in the cafe (Cup) and Ember works in the bookstore (Quill).

  • On a more abstract level it’s about combining things that are dissimilar, but still go together. As the story develops and different characters begin to partner up this theme will become more readily apparent.

'MAOR' is just the name of the protagonist. It's about his story. The name got another meaning though: it means 'light' or 'luminary' in Hebrew. It's purely coincidental.

Ubermensch literally means "superman"
The term was invented by the philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche. In my story about his life he becomes a superman and fights the forces of evil.

Pretty self-explanatory lol

literally means what it says. his life changed when he met his love interest.

Terra Prima is the name of a location, but it hasn't been mentioned in the story yet, and won't be for quite some time...

It means: Don't fucking name things when you're 15

Mine are fairly literal LOL

Guardian of Calandria - a book about the last gasp Guardians of a place called Calandria

Draygon Frost - This one is still literal but not as obvious until reading it. The MC has frost magic and she's the heir to the throne of Draygon, and Draygon is also her magical race. The sequel Draygon Inferno gets the Inferno part because the other main character has fire magic and if he doesn't learn how to control it he could burn the whole world. The third book will be Draygon Ashes but I haven't written enough of it to know if the Ashes part will truly play into the book or if it's just something my brain is all "this sounds cool" and I wind up changing it when I've written more of the book :joy: I opted to use Draygon in all 3 book titles as a means to make it an obvious connection between the 3 books.

I'm not sure when I'll be ready to bring it to Tapas but Lady of the Mysts is about magical woman who are called the Ladies of they Mysts. The MC's best friend will be taken by them early on in the book because she has the "spark" that makes her one of these Ladies and that in turn draws him into the entire plot.

I usually lean toward the more obvious titles and they often have something to do with the MC of that book or what happens in the book.

Our most popular one, "Insignificant Otters" came about when we were trying to come up with a cute title with "otters" in it. So, since these two are stranded on an island, we considered them "Insignificant". It was a delicious pun on "significant others" and we felt it worked. :smiley: We wanted to lean towards humorous because it's a comedy. :smiley:

When deities experiment a certain traitor game to win back their followers. Please root for them or their heavenly kingdom will collapse to faith poverty.